European Inflation Slides To Lowest Since 2009

Back in October, when European inflation shocked market observers after it tumbled to a then (revised)low of 0.7%, the reaction by the ECB was to shock everyone and lower rates by 25 bps - a completely unexpected move. Earlier today, Europe shocked everyone once again after it reported that annual Eurozone consumer inflation in March tumbled from 0.7% to a paltry 0.5%, the lowest level since November 2009, below already the depressingly low 0.6% forecast, driven primarily by energy costs which tumbled 2.1% courtesy of Japan continuing to export deflation (where are energy costs soaring? Look at the price of natgas in Japan for a hint).

Inflation has now been in the ECB's "danger zone" of below 1 percent for six consecutive months, and the flash reading increases the chances the ECB will cut interest rates when its Governing Council meets on Thursday. Speculation has also grown that it may employ other easing measures such as a negative deposit rate or even U.S.-style bond-buying.

But this year's late Easter, which has delayed the impact of rising travel and hotel prices at a time when many people go away in Europe, could encourage the euro zone's central bank to wait until its June meeting to act.

"This will keep the possibility of further monetary policy easing very much alive," said Nick Kounis, head of economic research at ABN AMRO in Amsterdam. "Nevertheless, the central bank has shown quite some tolerance for low inflation recently." ECB President Mario Draghi suggested after the ECB's March meeting that the bank will either do nothing or take bold action should the outlook deteriorate.

He has also said the bank has been preparing additional policy steps to guard against possible deflation, and that the longer inflation remained low, the higher was the probability of deflationary risks emerging.

The relentless weakening trend may focus minds, especially after the head of Germany's powerful central bank came out to discuss some of the bolder options in more detail, for example pumping more money into the economy via a bond-buying programme.

"There's still a case for easing, but we don't think there's going to be enough agreement within the Governing Council members to ease on Thursday," said Guillaume Menuet, an economist at Citigroup in London.

Not only that, but considering the relentless barrage of 'hints" at the ECB joining the Fed and BOJ at QEing, even by Buba's Weidmann, one can be absolutely certain that the ECB will do at most a token act, if anything, in its upcoming meetings. After all the ECB is now convinced, after Draghi's "whatever it takes" comments, that it can talk not only FX but inflation (and deflation) up and down. Alas, while Draghi may have fooled investors into buying Greek bonds two years after the country's default with nothing having been fixed, he will have a more difficult time halting the deflation-exporting juggernaut that is Japan. And furthermore, the last thing the collateral-starved world needs now, is to further impair the shadow banking machinery consisting of repo, margin and rehypothecation, all of which needs unencumbrable assets to operate. Assets which can not be in the possession of the central bank, as the Fed, which now owns 35% of all 10 Year equivalents, has found out the hard way.

Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen said Monday that the recovery still feels like a recession to many Americans, which is why the central bank will keep its "extraordinary" support for the economy for "some time to come."